MTNL, on the other hand, sought government help in making Rs 8,000-10,000 crore capital available citing telecom tariff war being fought by private operators. It also sought urgent measures to bring down employee cost.
Senior officials of Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd and Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd met the inter-ministerial group (IMG) amid financial stress in the telecom sector.
The two state-owned telecom PSUs sought government's support to become more agile, in the face of stiff competition from the private operators, especially aggressive new entrant Reliance Jio.
BSNL, on the other hand, has renewed its push for 700 MHz spectrum "through equity infusion route". In the spectrum auction last year, the telecom sector had ignored the premium 700 MHz band -- which was put up for sale for the first time -- at a reserve or base price of Rs 11,485 crore per MHz.
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However, BSNL has been asking for this premium spectrum for 4G and data services roll out.
Essentially, BSNL wants the revenue from such projects to be excluded from overall licence fee calculation.
BSNL has also sought compensation of Rs 1,520 crore for CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) spectrum it surrendered earlier.
When contacted, BSNL CMD Anupam Shrivastava told PTI: "Last year we were able to address the stress, but this year we are feeling the pinch due to competition. Despite our data throughput growing three folds, the revenue (in mobility business) is under pressure."
"The war between the operators is being fought on the strength of capital so the government should not be found wanting in its support in capital provisioning (for MTNL)," MTNL CMD P K Purwar said after the meeting with the IMG.
He further said that the high employee cost - a tab of Rs 2800 crore - is creating a "non-level playing field" for MTNL viz-a-viz private operators. It urged the government to look at options like voluntary retirement scheme (VRS) to bring down employee expenses.
The sector is reeling under Rs 4.6 lakh crore debt and its revenue as well as profitability are under severe strain following free voice and data offerings from Jio.
But Jio in its meeting with the IMG yesterday had blamed the industry's financial woes on the reluctance of established operators to use equity for investing into new technology.
The IMG is slated to meet banks including SBI, PNB, Axis Bank and HDFC on June 14, and the remaining telcos - Airtel, Vodafone and Idea Cellular - on June 16.